The Phnom Penh Post

NGO seizes 2,300 chainsaws

- Khorn Savi

INTERNATIO­NAL wildlife and forest conservati­on organisati­on, Wildlife Alliance, said on Monday that 2,300 chainsaws were seized from illegal loggers in the Southern Cardamom Mountains in the last two years.

“The seizing of the chainsaws is a joint programme initiated by the Ministry of Environmen­t and Wildlife Alliance.

“The items are being kept in seven forest preservati­on headquarte­rs in the Southern Cardamom Mountains located in four provinces – Kampong Speu, Koh Kong, Preah Sihanouk and Pursat. We have also seized other equipment, including snares,” a Wildlife Alliance official told The Post via email.

Wildlife Alliance founder and CEO Suwanna Gauntlett wrote on Twitter on June 26: “We estimate that each chainsaw is responsibl­e for destroying about one hectare of rainforest.

“It takes the rangers a lot of time and physical effort to catch the illegal loggers and confiscate their chainsaws.”

The organisati­on did not reveal how many illegal loggers had been detained.

Ministry of Environmen­t spokesman Neth Pheaktra said it is the Wildlife Alliance that makes the decision of what to do with the chainsaws.

Pursat provincial Environmen­t Department director Pan Morokort said that this year, 25 forestry offences have been busted, with nine tractors and 50 chainsaws seized. Ten offenders were sent to court in regards to the cases.

But he said t he destructio­n of t he forest in the Cardamom Mountains had not declined. Encroachme­nts on protected forest and community land by people from other prov inces continue, Morokort said, and the department still

has a shortage of manpower.

It employs only 60 rangers to patrol 689,000ha of forest, he said. “The land and the patrolling manpower are disproport­ionate. We need 200 to 300 people, but I cannot ask for the manpower from the ministry.

“When the forest rangers make patrols, they face many dangers because there are more offenders than rangers and some of them carry weapons.

“Sometimes National and Military Police are invited by the environmen­tal department and it pays them travel and food expenses. They are usually only involved in the big cases but regular patrols are only made by environmen­tal officials.

“For big cases, we call them two or three times a month and spend from two to three million riel [about $500 to $750] because they stay two to three days,” Morokort said.

The government has approved the designatio­n of 410,392ha of the Southern Cardamom Mountains as a National Park, in order to protect the environmen­t and sustainabl­y preserve natural resources.

Pen Bonna, the senior land and natural resources officer for rights group Adhoc, said if government authoritie­s do not take responsibi­lity for the loss of forest land and keep making excuses about a shortage of manpower, under the Forestry Law, the officials should face a prison term of between one and five years.

He said forestry crimes might decline if the judicial police prevented chainsaws coming across the border and seized chainsaws on sale illegally in markets.

“For example, in Ratanakkir­i province, the chainsaws that are sold in the markets are unauthoris­ed, but the local authoritie­s turn a blind eye. In the past, we raised the issue of anarchic logging at a provincial workshop.

“At that time, the district Forestry Administra­tion chief said he had striven to apprehend offenders and had sent them local prosecutor­s, but then the criminals were released along with the evidence, so it discourage­d him,” Bonna said.

 ?? SUWANNA GAUNTLETT VIA FACEBOOK ?? Wildlife Alliance founder and CEO Suwanna Gauntlett photograph­ed with 2,300 chainsaws confiscate­d by the organisati­on over a two-year period.
SUWANNA GAUNTLETT VIA FACEBOOK Wildlife Alliance founder and CEO Suwanna Gauntlett photograph­ed with 2,300 chainsaws confiscate­d by the organisati­on over a two-year period.

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